VIDEOS & PHOTOS

Shane Cateriny’s ministry with New Tribes Mission is not simply working on a building. It’s making sure there’s a place fit for training people to go to unreached people. Watch the video about Shane's journey.

Your heart will rejoice as you witness the Mouk tribe of Papua New Guinea respond dramatically to the Gospel. You'll follow their story from murderous sorcery and deceit, to a life-changing understanding of what God has done for them. This is a powerful story of God's Word, presented clearly and chronologically in their own language, breaking through the darkness that held the Mouks in bondage.

Want to open your eyes to missions without leaving the USA? Wayumi Expedition is a summer camp and a summer missions trip, all rolled into one. At our campus in Pennsylvania, high school students will discover how they can be a part of reaching isolated people groups who have never heard the Gospel.

As a typhoon approached, their daughter became more and more ill. There was only one way for Danny and Philippa Brooks to get her out of the remote location where they serve as church planters, and that flight had already been cancelled.

The Dinangat people had Christian religious practices along with worship of their ancestors. Did the people need to hear about Jesus? A Dinangat leader, Areke, would tell you that they did need to hear about Jesus – in their own language. Everything the Dinangats knew had been taught to them 50 years ago in a trade language that only a few Dinangat people spoke with limited understanding.Read more about the Dinangat people in the NTM@work article “The Village God Remembered."Runtime: 5:26

Instructors and students talk about the practical skills and spiritual preparation needed for effective cross-cultural ministry among unreached people groups. Learn more about New Tribes Mission's Missionary Training Center in Missouri at ntm.org/train.Runtime: 3:36

Take a glimpse into a missionary life as Bible Translator Lisa Kappeler talks about living with the Uriay people of Papua New Guinea. The church planting team completed evangelistic Bible lessons in September 2010.

New Tribes Mission seeks to establish mature churches among people who are isolated from the gospel. After teaching chronologically in the tribes' own language and culture, believers are discipled to lead the church and partner in the Great Commission.

The folks who are part of the church-planting team tell you much they value the foundation for ministry they received at New Tribes Bible Institute, and the practical instruction from missionary training.

Want to experience tribal without leaving the States? You can... in weekend or weeklong visits to the Wayumi campus in Pennsylvania. On your Wayumi adventure, explore what the Bible says about reaching all peoples. Experience learning a tribal language. Connect with your guides — all veteran church planters.

An Interface experience. Looking to learn more about missions? Interface may be the answer for you. Come face-to-face with realities unknown to most people. See firsthand what it takes to plant a church among people who have no concept of the God of the Bible. Interact with missionaries on the field, and spend time with tribal people. Learn about Interface.

People groups who haven't heard the truth of God's Word still inhabit remote places of the earth. Although the obstacles may be many and great, these people are REACHABLE! Missionary Jana Price, who went with her husband, Joe, to the Panares of Venezuela, said, "It's an overwhelming privilege to see God work.' 'I wish I was young enough to start another work. I think about being up in heaven with our Panare brothers and sisters, and there's just nothing like it."

An estimated 2,500 of the world's 6,500 people groups are still unreached. Local churches partner with New Tribes Mission to give them opportunities to know Jesus. As in the First Century, missionaries establish mature churches so disciple-making continues and spreads to other villages and neighboring tribes.

“It was totally impossible…but we knew that God had put us there.” Sharon shares some of the difficulties of living among the Kuna people in Panama. Read more from the NTM@work article Get me out of here!